Yeah, but don't tell fans that.Honestly comparing Star Trek: The Animated Series to Star Trek: Lower Decks makes about as much sense to me as comparing Dragnet 1967 to Brooklyn Nine-Nine.
My names Friday, my partner is Jake Peralta. I'm in HR filling out a transfer request...Honestly comparing Star Trek: The Animated Series to Star Trek: Lower Decks makes about as much sense to me as comparing Dragnet 1967 to Brooklyn Nine-Nine.
Given Peralta's love affair with old school policing he might be on board for that...briefly.My names Friday, my partner is Jake Peralta. I'm in HR filling out a transfer request...
Tom Hanks' character in Dragnet (1987), Pep Streebeck, was a bit Peralta-ish.Given Peralta's love affair with old school policing he might be on board for that...briefly.
Then, hijinks!
Except unilke The Orville, ST:LDS actually manages to be funny once in awhile, and it fits.Lower Decks seems like an animated version of The Orville's first season. Basically a comedy.
Given Peralta's love affair with old school policing he might be on board for that...briefly.
Then, hijinks!
Some of the background paintings of alien worlds are lovely works of art, with subtle shades of acrylic paints layered in translucent gradients.
Backgrounds in LD are matching line drawings, filled in with single colors, so not really screenshot-worthy wallpaper materials. But I get how minimalist designs appeal to other viewers; not everyone's into naturalistic art.
Which ones? There've been several: in "Yesteryear," "Once Upon a Planet," and "The Infinite Vulcan," at least, off the top of my head.Also anybody thinking we're gonna see those goofy dragon things from TAS in LD at some point?
Which ones? There've been several: in "Yesteryear," "Once Upon a Planet," and "The Infinite Vulcan," at least, off the top of my head.
Right, those would be the ones I was referring to in "The Infinite Vulcan."The purple screeching ones with the corkscrew legs from the episode with the giant Mr.Spock.
Oddly, Lower Decks is more comparable to Brooklyn Nine-Nine (ensemble comedy with irreverent humor) than it is TAS -- and I don't mean that to necessarily be a bad thing.Honestly comparing Star Trek: The Animated Series to Star Trek: Lower Decks makes about as much sense to me as comparing Dragnet 1967 to Brooklyn Nine-Nine.
Oddly, Lower Decks is more comparable to Brooklyn Nine-Nine (ensemble comedy with irreverent humor) than it is TAS -- and I don't mean that to necessarily be a bad thing.
Nothing odd about it. 99 is a great show and fits Trek well.Oddly, Lower Decks is more comparable to Brooklyn Nine-Nine (ensemble comedy with irreverent humor) than it is TAS -- and I don't mean that to necessarily be a bad thing.
I agree "oddly enough" is not the correct term. Maybe "interestingly enough" would have been better.Why should that be odd? There's no reason to expect any two given animated shows to be written the same way, any more than there's any reason to expect any two live-action shows to be written the same way. Especially since Lower Decks has always been clearly promoted as a comedy from the start.
I guess I was writing that with the OP in mind -- specifically how he made the comparison between TAS and Lower Decks simply because both are animated. I think the animated aspect of those shows is a superficial similarity that says nothing about the overall tone of them, which is a more salient point of comparison.
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